Church teaches us not to focus on material wealth while it itself owns quite a lot of it. The priests and bishops live lavish lives, and build grand churches while people live in poverty. Why?
The magisterium or the teaching authority of the Church comes directly from Christ. The teachings of the Church are the teachings of Christ. Jesus’s mandate to his disciple before leaving earth was to teach people to obey all his commandments. Mathew 28:19. And Jesus also said to his disciples “He who hears you hears me” Luke 10:16.
Now about material possessions Jesus said “Do not store up for yourself treasures on earth where moths and vermin destroy and where thieves break in and steal. But store for yourself treasures in heaven where moths and vermin do not destroy and where thieves do not break in and steal for where your treasure is, there your heart will be also” Mathew 6:19-21
Jesus teaches us not to be attached to material possessions but to trust in God for all our needs including material needs. He taught us to pray “give us this day our daily bread”.
Thus the mandate of Christ is the mandate of the Catholic Church. And that’s why the Catholic Church will continue to uphold and teach the Truth despite her own failures. We should be thankful that these teachers are not watering down the original teachings to fit their own weaknesses and disordered desires. So it is important that we learn to distinguish between the teaching office of the Catholic Church and how the members of the Church respond to this teaching.
Every blessing including material blessing comes from God. As God’s people we need land and money. We need churches to offer worship to God, we need schools to educate, we need hospitals to continue the healing ministry of Christ. We need establishments to govern and function as a community. But if our focus turns from service to wealth itself, we are failing to obey Jesus’s own commandment. It is applicable not only to the bishops and priests but to each one of us. If my life’s goal is amassing material wealth, and I value my material possessions more than God, or if my trust is in my possession rather than in God, the question that Jesus asks is pointed towards us – ‘You fool! This very night your life will be demanded from you. Then who will get what you have prepared for yourself?’ Luke 12:20
Often we become critical of the clergy because of a wound or a bad experience we may have received from them. We also assume Church to them and believers to be us. In fact we are the Church. It is just that some members of the Church offer their lives to serve the kingdom as priests and religious are chosen by God to undertake specific roles in the kingdom of God. It is also a call to a higher virtue and service. But sometimes human beings fail like we all do. But God offers us opportunities to change our ways and follow Jesus’s commandments faithfully in the Church, through the Church and with the Church.
Every church people build belongs to the people of that parish. The parishioners decide the size and architecture of the building. They often want the best for God. Look at the women at the feet of Jesus who recklessly pour out the expensive Nardine perfume on to his feet. Jesus does not condemn her. But we notice Judas does and the bible tells us what his intentions were. So if the building is built as a style statement or a show of might, money and power, the intention as we know is questionable before God.
And finally Jesus also desires that we look into our own condition before judging others so he tells us “First take the plank out of your own eye, and then you will see clearly to remove the speck from your brother’s eye. Mathew 7:5.
We do see Pope Francis and countless Bishops taking steps encouraging us to cut down extravagance and be wise stewards of the God-given wealth.
Dear Sir
Thank you for your reply. If i may ask a complementary question, how do i respond when someone says
“why spend money for a new church when instead the money can be used for the poor or to build a hospital”
Thank you.
Shawn, We do need hospitals and orphanages. But we cannot offer worship to God in these places. It has to be a Church. Would it be real love if one only feeds the poor and ignores the soul? Man needs both, food for the stomach and food for the soul. One cannot replace the other. Both are important. The parishioners along with the parish priest can discern the immediate need and act accordingly.
Yo,
I think a better phrased quote would be : “Why spend so much on gold, ornaments and other random stuff in a church than just have simple churches with the essentials, and then give the money to save lives?” There are many churches which have simple ornaments that either due financial strain, the location or someone having brain opted out of the glitz in favour of saving money. No one condemns those churches as second rate or lesser in value. This clearly shows that its unnecessary to spend money on these other things in order, as you say, to have places of worship to God. This is especially important when the money saved could be used for saving people’s lives.
Thanks for your time in replying and responding to our questions, appreciate it!
Neil
Agree with you. But I would like to clarify a few things. Certain things in the church ought to set apart for worship like the chalice, paten, monstrance etc. They are usually gold or gold plated. Gold in the Bible represents things that are set apart for God. We see this a lot in the Old Testament. But if the parish decides to spend money on gold ornaments to decorate the statues or something like that it is questionable unless they have a superior good in mind like saving lives or helping those in need with the with money it generates on sale. Appreciate your comments. God bless you.
Thanks for the response mate!